Daily Mirror

Middle-aged boozers behind rise in hospital drink cases

358,000 admissions is record high

- BY MARTIN BAGOT Health Editor martin.bagot@mirror.co.uk @MartinBago­t

MIDDLE-AGED boozers made up 40% of the record numbers admitted to hospital for being drunk.

Drinking alcohol was the main reason for 358,000 admissions to hospital in 2018/19, according to NHS Digital data.

It is the highest level in England since records began in 2003, shows a 6% rise from 338,000 in 2017/18 and is up from 237,000 in 2003/04.

Diagnosis ranged from “acute intoxicati­on” and “withdrawal state”. Those aged between 45 and 64 accounted for 40% of cases. Laura Bunt, of the charity

Addaction, said: “The group most at risk are older adults. Divorce, bereavemen­t, financial issues or retirement can leave people feeling isolated. Harmful alcohol use among older adults is often hidden.”

A broader measure shows 1.3 million admissions in 2018/19 were due to booze, which is one in 14 of all visits.

Men and women aged 55 to 64 are the most likely to exceed the maximum recommende­d 14 units of alcohol a week.

Almost 6,000 deaths were caused by alcohol last year. Sir Ian Gilmore, of the Alcohol Health Alliance, urged a 2% rise in alcohol duty and minimum pricing in England.

Ian Hudspeth, of the Local Government Associatio­n, said: “Councils need long-term investment in health services.”

Nuno Albuquerqu­e, of UK Addiction Treatment, said: “Alcohol is a ticking time bomb about to explode.” Industry body the Alcohol Informatio­n Partnershi­p called for measures to help target the “minority of problem drinkers”. Public Health Minister Jo Churchill said: “Care teams will be introduced in hospitals with the highest number of alcohol-related admissions. We expect this to prevent 50,000 admissions over five years.”

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